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What Is Psychology? What Are The Branches Of Psychology?
Psychology is the science of the mind and behavior. The word "psychology" comes from the Greek word psyche meaning "breath, spirit, soul", and the Greek word logia meaning the study of something. According to Medilexicon"s medical dictionary, psychology is "The profession (clinical psychology), scholarly discipline (academic psychology), and science (research psychology) concerned with the behavior of humans and animals, and related mental and physiologic processes." Although psychology may also include the study of the mind and behavior of animals, in this article psychology refers mainly to humans.
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Researchers Develop Key Brake For Immune Cells In Petri Dish -- Hope For Easier Organ Transplantation?
Scientists from the Helmholtz Center for Infection Research in Braunschweig, Germany and the Medical School Hannover, Germany have succeeded in treating immune cells in a way that enables them to inhibit unwanted immune reactions such as organ rejection. Their results have now been published in the current issue of the scientific journal Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine.
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University of Rhode Island Receives $18 Million Grant To Strengthen Biomedical Research Capacity In Rhode Island
The University of Rhode Island has been awarded a five-year, $18 million grant by a branch of the National Institutes of Health to strengthen biomedical research capacity in Rhode Island. One of the largest grants in the University"s history, the grant is the third in a series of multi-million dollar awards the agency has given URI for this purpose since 2001, for a total of $42 million.
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New Treatments Should Be Introduced Gradually To Avoid Later Problems, Says Expert

Concerns over whether the tests a treatment undergoes before release onto the market are enough to ensure its long-term safety are raised in an editorial published by BMJ Clinical Evidence today. Dr Vijay Sharma suggests that treatments should be introduced gradually so that evidence can be built up and the treatment can find its proper niche. To illustrate this, he discusses the recent debate on the long-term safety of drug-eluting stents. Stents (small tubes) are used to unblock arteries that have become thickened by fatty deposits. They improve blood flow and reduce the risk of death from coronary artery disease. Drug-eluting stents slowly release drugs to stop blood clots blocking the stented arteries, a process called restenosis. Drug-eluting stents were used with great enthusiasm when first introduced in 2002, but since 2006 several reports have highlighted an increased risk of clotting as late as one year after treatment (known as late-stent thrombosis). But why was this risk not detected sooner, asks the author? One reason may relate to the outcomes that early clinical trials set out to measure. Another may be that trials have predominantly focused on low risk cases, yet drug-eluting stents were also used in complex cases, where the underlying risk of clotting is higher. More complex cases also require the use of more stents and longer stents, further increasing the risk of late-stent thrombosis, he explains. All adverse effects must be carefully assessed in large-scale studies, writes Dr Sharma. But they must also be balanced against the threat posed by coronary artery disease itself, and interpreted in the context of other treatment options. He concludes: "Treatments are often greeted with enthusiasm when they first appear only to fall into disfavour when adverse effects are found. Then, with time, some of these treatments return with a more limited and clearly defined use. To avoid this pattern, adverse effects should be actively sought, and treatments should be introduced gradually so that experience and evidence can be built up and the treatment can find its proper niche." British Medical Journal


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